PBBM should act quickly on remaining courtesy resignations, says Lacson
At A Glance
- Sen. Panfilo "Ping" Lacson said the President should quickly act on the remaining Cabinet positions to avoid possible inefficiency and divisiveness in the ranks.
Senator-elect Panfilo “Ping” Lacson urged President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. to act quickly on the pending courtesy resignations of his Cabinet members, noting that the jockeying for positions in the Cabinet has intensified.
Lacson said the President should do this to avoid possible inefficiency and divisiveness in the ranks, noting that some have resorted to foul means.
“An unsolicited advice: the President should act quickly on the pending courtesy resignations,” Lacson said in a post on X late Wednesday, May 28.
“The season for jockeying for positions has intensified with the usual circulation of 'white papers' and floating of names of 'applicants' to fill up some still 'unvacated posts’,” he noted.
“Uncertainty often leads to inefficiency and divisiveness in the ranks,” he added.
So far, the President has accepted the resignations of at least two out of 52 Cabinet officials who submitted their courtesy resignations - Ambassador Antonio Lagdameo, Permanent Representative to the United Nations, and Environment Secretary Maria Antonia Yulo Loyzaga.
But he has retained key members of his economic team while others were reassigned to other positions.
Marcos defended retaining his economic team citing the need to sustain financial stability.
Earlier, Lacson raised the need for the President to exercise his persuasive powers over Congress to end indiscriminate insertions and pork barrel in the 2026 national budget.
He also pushed for the integration of "ayuda" programs under the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) in the 2026 National Expenditure Program (NEP).
"With the President taking the lead in at least tempering the insatiable greed of some legislators, I vow to do my share in helping him come up with a national budget that is truly responsive to the people’s clamor for sanity and a little timidity among the members of Congress in addressing the needs of their constituents," Lacson assured.